I was a young lawyer at Vinson & Elkins when one of its partners recommended me for a job in Oxy’s new Dubai office. My first interview was with Oxy’s General Counsel, Donald de Brier. When I was escorted into his cavernous office, Donald had his back to me and was gazing toward the distant Pacific Ocean. His assistant introduced me, and I sat down, but Donald did not acknowledge my presence. One minute after another passed while I waited patiently for my interview to begin. Finally Donald spun his chair around and asked:

“I see you went to the University of Texas for college. Couldn’t you have gotten into a better school?”

Notwithstanding my choice of college, I was offered the job of Legal Manager for Occidental Middle East Development Company, which chased new deals for Oxy’s CEO, Dr. Ray Irani. Dr. Irani was a graduate of American University in Beirut, Lebanon. He spoke fluent Arabic and was personally acquainted with many Middle Eastern rulers.

Our team in the Middle East would get 95% of a deal negotiated, and then Irani would arrive on his Boeing Business Jet—a Boeing 737 turned into a flying palace with an office, bedroom, and shower. During one of these meetings, an Abu Dhabi sheikh complimented Dr. Irani’s new BBJ. The sheikh then bragged about how he had a fleet of them, each configured for 24 passengers. Dr. Irani, witty as ever, quipped back:

“My BBJ is configured for one.”

The sheikh laughed so hard he almost fell over. When Dr. Irani was in his element among sheikhs and sultans, there was no one more charming. He remains the best deal closer I have ever seen.

Dr. Ray Irani

I also had the opportunity to support Irani during Oxy’s 2004 reentry into Libya (after sanctions were lifted):

Irani wanted to be first in line and was granted a meeting at Kadafi’s desert retreat. Speaking in fluent Arabic, the Lebanese-born Irani made his pitch – even though Kadafi seemed noncommittal.

“He was courteous, but clearly he wanted us to have a cup of coffee and leave,” Irani recalled.

But the 70-year-old Irani pressed on, Kadafi kept listening and the pair met again two months later. Then, in January, Libya awarded its first batch of 15 exploration sites – with nine going to Occidental.

“That’s not a bad batting average,” Irani said in an interview. “I was pleasantly surprised.” James F. Peltz, “Well-Oiled Turnaround” (Los Angeles Times, June 5, 2005).

Dr. Irani was the second CEO in Oxy’s storied history—succeeding Armand Hammer, who ran Oxy until his death at 92. Irani’s reign as Emperor of Oxy lasted for ~23 years. His 2013 departure was the result of a “brutal boardroom struggle” with his chosen successor, Steve Chazen. Clifford Krauss, “Occidental Chairman Agrees to Step Down Ahead of Schedule” (New York Times, May 3, 2013).

Notwithstanding his premature exit, Dr. Irani’s tenure at Oxy was impressive. During his time at the helm, Oxy’s market cap increased 15-fold. Irani’s best (personal) year was 2006, in which he earned ~$460 million, mostly from equity gains. While such extreme payouts made Irani the target of executive compensation crusaders, many believed he was worth it:

The rebound “has been nothing short of spectacular,” analyst Ben Dell of Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. wrote in a report . . . Occidental is “one of the few genuine turnaround stories” in the exploration-and-production industry, he added. James F. Peltz, “Well-Oiled Turnaround” (Los Angeles Times, June 5, 2005).

How’s he doing now? The 82-year-old Irani has a net worth of ~$1.5 billion, and he’s been selling off Oxy stock to fund his charitable endeavors and investments elsewhere:

Working out of his Westwood family office, Irani further diversified his portfolio, which includes investments in medical-related real estate properties, private equity, and bonds. . . . He is a trustee of USC, his alma mater. Irani donated $20 million toward the university’s under-construction USC Village complex. . . . His wife, Ghada, was recently named to Unicef’s national board. “Wealthiest Angelenos” (Los Angeles Business Journal, August 28, 2017)

During my time at Oxy, I had the opportunity to interact with several other Emperor CEOs:

Exxon’s Lee Raymond. This quote from Lee Raymond summed up his view of the world—“We see governments come and go.” Raymond was the emperor of emperor CEOs, and he knew it. I saw him in action at a closing ceremony, where he wanted little to do with the other two CEOs in the room—who were both from smaller multi-billion dollar companies. Raymond retired from ExxonMobil with a $400 million package at the end of 2005. The 79-year-old Raymond currently serves on the Board of Directors of JPMorgan Chase.

Lee Raymond

Total’s Christophe de Margerie. While at Oxy, I spent a year as the Senior Advisor for Gas Marketing to the Dolphin Gas Project—a 2 bcf per day Qatari gas field development and pipeline jointly built by Oxy, Total, and the government of the United Arab Emirates. At various Dolphin events, I had the opportunity to become acquainted with Christophe de Margerie. He reminded me a lot of Dr. Irani—another larger-than-life deal closer. De Margerie boasted that “[n]othing replaces human warmth and handshaking. You don’t win a contract by telephone.” Sadly, his private jet crashed in 2014, ending his life and career prematurely at age 63.

Christophe de Margerie

BP’s Lord John Browne. I first met Lord Browne at the World Petroleum Congress in Johannesburg, South Africa, when he was still CEO of BP. Not long after our first meeting, he left BP and joined Riverstone. I had been working with Riverstone for several months to finalize the firm’s backing for round two of my African oil and gas exploration company—Passenger Energy Partners. I recently sold my first company (which had acquired interests in Cameroon, Madagascar, and South Africa) and was looking for $100-$200 million of equity to build a new portfolio of non-operated interests in West and East Africa. The “Passenger” name came from my concept of riding alongside first-class operators such as ExxonMobil, Anadarko, and BHP—letting them absorb all the risks of operatorship. After a few trips to New York, I had the backing of Riverstone’s board—except for Lord Browne. I flew to London for a one-on-one meeting to change his mind. Browne was a formidable opponent for my non-operated concept because he had an “operator only” philosophy at BP. I was unable to win him over. In 2015, Lord Browne resigned from Riverstone to become “Executive Chairman of L1 Energy, an oil and gas investment vehicle which acts as a subsidiary of LetterOne Holdings, co-owned by Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman.” Wikipedia.

Lord John Browne

Anadarko’s James Hackett. Hackett is now a partner at Riverstone and CEO of Silver Run II, a $1 billion publicly-listed energy investment fund. Hackett also is on the faculty of Rice University.

James Hackett

ConocoPhillips’ James Mulva. Mulva exited with a $260 million package in 2012 and currently serves on the Boards of Directors of General Electric and General Motors. He has made significant donations to the University of Texas at Austin, including $50 million to create the Mulva Clinic for Neuroscience.

James Mulva

All of these personalities could sit with world leaders as equals—wielding power that, for better or worse, few current industry CEOs have. When one of these men made a promise, everyone knew it would be kept. At their heyday, no one was second-guessing them. Were these CEOs any more talented than their companies’ current leaders? Probably not. But they were able to do more—because of their authority. Maybe such supremacy gave them the confidence and presence to stand toe-to-toe with kings, emirs, sultans, sheikhs, and, well, dictators.

Over the last decade, the Internet has lessened the power of CEOs. Their every move is subject to criticism on social media and message boards. Boards of directors are more powerful than they used to be, too. While the transparency created by the Internet has rightfully ended the careers of many who should not have been CEOs, it also has shackled and diminished those who could have been great ones.

We now live in an age in which there are no heroes. Even past heroes’ mistakes are dissected, paraded about, and focused on until that’s all anyone remembers about them. The current state of affairs brings to mind a Japanese proverb: The nail that pops up is always hammered down. Our current crop of industry CEOs may be more focused on survival than achieving greatness.

About the Gaille Energy Blog. The Gaille Energy Blog discusses issues in the field of energy law, with periodic posts at www.gaillelaw.com. Scott Gaille is a Lecturer in Law at the University of Chicago Law School, an Adjunct Professor in Management at Rice University’s Graduate School of Business, and the author of three books on energy law (Construction Energy Development, Shale Energy Development, and International Energy Development).

Images available on the Internet and included in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107.

One thought on “Dr. Ray Irani & the Emperor CEOs: Where Are They Now? [Gaille Energy Blog Issue 58]”

Thank you for this beautiful portray of an astonishing man, Dr Irani is examplery in his dealings with a charming presence and gracious persona, he is one of the most generous people I have ever met as he personally saved me during my worst times.
Will always be remembering him with so much respect and love.